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Landseer litter born in Sept.
Sire: ThreePonds Benny and The Jets RN,CD
Dam: Osa's Lilly WhiteAz Oceano TDI
The
Newfoundland is a dog which has served man in many capacities.
He excels as a companion, protector, baby sitter, lifeguard,
ship dog, draft animal, pack carrier, natural retriever, obedience
dog and even helped Lewisand Clark to explore the Pacific Northwest.
In addition to breed and obedience showing, many Newfoundland
owners compete with their dogs in water trials, weight pulls,
carting, travois, backpacking events, skijoring, sledding and
Therapy work. Draft Test

The Newfoundland,
a gentle giant among canines, is a striking dog bound to elicit admiring
comments wherever he accompanies his owner. A sweet, devoted companion,
the Newfoundland will protect children, haul leaves and firewood,
save drowning people, and compete successfully in obedience and tracking
trials. Born as a canine seaman, the Newfoundland was a standard piece
of equipment on every fishing boat in Canada's maritime province that
gave the breed its name.
Fishing has always been Newfoundland's chief industry; the dogs hauled
fishing nets out to sea and back to the boat and retrieved objects
or people who fell into the sea. Equally at home in water or on land,
the Newfoundland was large enough to pull in a drowning man or to
break the ice as he dove into the frigid northern ocean. His lung
capacity allowed him to swim great distances and fight ocean currents.
At the end of a day's fishing,
the day's catch was loaded into a cart, and the dog was hitched up
to haul the load into town. Other Newfoundlands pulled wagons to deliver
milk and mail throughout the island. The origin of this working breed
is disputed. Vikings and Basque fishermen visited Newfoundland as
early as 1000 AD and wrote accounts of the natives working side by
side with these retrieving dogs. The breed as we know it
today was developed in England, while the island of Newfoundland nearly
legislated the native breed to extinction in 1780. Then, shortly after
World War I, a magnificent dog named Siki became not only the most
famous show Newfoundland in history, but the most famous stud dog
of the breed. Most Newfoundlands in the conformation ring today can
trace their pedigrees to Siki.
There are many legends
of Newfoundlands saving drowning victims by carrying lifelines to
sinking ships. The dogs were kept in the "dog walk" on early
sailing ships. If the sea was too choppy when land was sighted, the
dog carried a line to land. A Newfoundland named Seaman was selected
to accompany the Lewis and Clark expedition, and Nana, the children's
"nurse" in the original of "Peter Pan" was a Newfoundland.
"Nana" from Peter Pan
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